Posts Tagged ‘Cote d’Or’
Friday, November 19th, 2010
Red Burgundies have a frightening reputation when it comes to pricing, some of the top running into the many hundreds if not thousands of dollars. The combination of a limited production and outstanding quality and reputation place many of these wines outside the budget of the mortal man.
While the white Burgundies such as Montrachet and Corton-Charlemagne, can be very expensive, as well, there are some great opportunities out there for hard core collectors who just can’t bring themselves to pay several hundred dollars.
One of these wines is the Louis Jadot Puligny-Montrachet Les Folatieres, 2005. Louis Jadot owns vineyards throughout the Cote d’Or, Maconnais and Beaujolais. Made from 100% Chardonnay grapes, the Puligny-Montrachet shares with Chassagne, some of the greatest white wine producing vineyards in the world. The vineyard soils are clay and chalk, well drained and warm easily year round. After harvest and vinification, the wine is barrel aged for 12-15 months in barrels produced by the Jadot cooper. In a well controlled environment, this wine can be stored for a good 10 years.
The aromatic profile is a one of peaches and cream yet still retaining a lively core of citrus fruit. With a hint of toasty oak and a finish of great minerality, this is fantastic wine to pair with fish, shellfish (amazing with lobster), strong cheese and poultry in cream sauce.
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Tags: Beaujolais, Chassagne, Corton-Charlemagne, Cote d'Or, Jadot, Maconnais, Montrachet, Puligny-Montrachet, white Burgundy Posted in Wine Collector's Corner | Submit Your Comment »
Friday, July 23rd, 2010
Our recent voyage to France took us through the Cote d’Or or “golden slope” of Burgundy as it’s known and then on to Northern and Southern Rhone. Traveling in our little Citron stick shift auto from the Cote de Nuits to the Cote de Beaune evoked a sense of deep of history of the region, the monks of over a millennium ago laying the foundation for today’s industry and an awe for the sacred terroir and the hard working vintners that produce Burgundies against which all others are compared.
The Cote d'Or is divided into two separate and very different wine producing regions: the Cote de Nuits in the north and the Cote de Beaune in the south. The Cote de Nuits, unequivocally, produces the finest red Burgundies on the planet. No sooner do you depart Dijon than you magically enter an agricultural wonderland with a history of winemaking that spans over a millennium. If there’s anything that distinguishes this region from all others, it has to be its terroir, specifically, the soil, a mix of limestone and marl that sets the stage for the finest Pinot Noir in the world. For sake of ease, let’s define “terroir” as all those physical and environmental elements that impact the vines, the grapes and the wines. This includes the soil, its exposure to sun, its elevation and slope, the water table, and of course, the climate.
What you may not appreciate is the series of slopes, geologic faults and rifts that determine the structure and depth of soil components that derive from the Jurassic and Triassic period. For example, the Saone fault zone represents a distinct break between two very different geologic profiles. On the upslope is the weathered Jurassic limestone and marl, those soils that nourish the Pinot Noir grape. On the down slope, in the valley, the soils are more clay and sand. As the water table in the valley is rather high, the vine’s roots are easily saturated and can yield reds are that are less powerful and concentrated compared to their brethren. It’s this geology that often answers the question: “how can one vineyard’s wines display one expression while another only a short distance removed offers another?”
In addition, elemental nutrients and efficient cation exchange play a key in the structure of the wines, with phosphorus thought to have a profound influence upon the taste of the wine.
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Tags: Burgundy, Cote d'Or, Cote de Beaune, Cote de Nuits Posted in Wine Education | Submit Your Comment »
Thursday, September 10th, 2009
The universe of alternative French whites is significantly broader than for reds and thus offers more opportunities for pairing with food.
The Alsatian region in far northeast France, bordering Germany, has built a traditional reputation for producing very food friendly rich, dry white wines. However, in recent years, the tendency has been to produce more sweet wine. The grapes are a mixture of French, German and some exotic varieties. The four grapes, Gewurztraminer, German Riesling, Pinot Gris and Muscat produced namesake wine that define this region separated from the rest of France by the Vosges mountain range.
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Tags: Aligote, Alsace, Australia, Baillard, Bourboulenc, Bourchard Pere & Fils, Bourgeois, Brocard, Burgundy, Chablis, Chardonnay, Chateauneuf-du-Pape, Chenin Blanc, Chidaine, Clairette, Corton-Charlemagne, Cotat, Cote d'Or, Cote de Beaune, Dagueneau, Dauvissat, Des Baumard, Droin, Drouhin, Fevre, Gewurztraminer, Grenache Blanc, Hugel & Fils, Humbrecht, Joly, Leflaive, Loire, Macon, Maconnais, Meursault, Monlouis sur Loire, Montrachat, Muscadet, Muscat, Nantais, Picpoul, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Pouilly Fuisse, Pouilly-Fume, Raveneau, Rhone, Riesling, Roussanne, Sancerre, Sauvignon Blanc, Savennieres, Semillon, Smith Haut Lafitte, St. Veran, Trimbach, Viognier, Vouvray, white Bordeaux, white Hermitage Posted in Wine & Food Pairing | 2 Comments - Submit Your Comment »
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